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non-US-ASCII characters in IETF documents

2001-09-25 17:40:03
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Dave Crocker <dhc2(_at_)dcrocker(_dot_)net> writes:

Equally, it is clear that the strongly international quality to the
IETF requires permitting at least SOME encoding of non-ASCII.

I would say that to the contrary, the strongly international nature of
IETF (with different default character sets, different sets of fonts,
various national conventions, etc.), dictates using a lowest common
denominator of US-ASCII for the documents (in much the same way that
diversity of computing environments encourages plain text documents).

As you note, at least being able to encode a person's name properly
would seem more than appropriate.

The "proper" encoding of my name is óÔÁÎÉÓÌÁ× ûÁÌÕÎÏ× (in KOI8-R; the
Russian language has at least four character sets in active use).  Can
you read that?  I thought so.  That's why I write it in US-ASCII in
English-language documents (such as I-Ds).

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i/2EEyGG/ls/9eAAEnQ+tK4+i7/o3jeAcf2S9TCTAKImac/ifh2zHrlbsqbWXt7L
O3qq6ydO88ZPpSg8iejCCr1PqgE49XiNk64fMkHWqxgf/NtzXkbmripXSxlRXrD5
Wv0Y64As9fM=
=uGkA
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-- 
Stanislav Shalunov              http://www.internet2.edu/~shalunov/

Beware of Programmers who carry screwdrivers.    -- Leonard Brandwein